FIFA is reinforcing its fight against discrimination in football with the introduction of a new anti-discrimination monitoring system for the 2018 FIFA World Cup™ qualifiers. The system includes the deployment of Anti-Discrimination Match Observers to monitor and report issues of discrimination at the games. It will be coordinated by FIFA and implemented in collaboration with the Fare network, an organisation with long experience in the fight against discrimination in football and the deployment of match observers.

Of course, abandoning a match in the face of rising tensions could have the unintended effect of sparking even more unrest among fans, a possibility that refs would have to consider prior to halting a match.

Russia also hosts the World Cup next year and is working to clean up its image as a country mired not only in racism but in intolerance of the LGBTQ community. As such, many feel that belying this new policy is the corruption that allowed for the controversial awarding of the next two World Cups to Russia and Qatar, both egregious violators of human rights.

Recently, a Carnival parade in Sochi produced photos of many overtly racist acts like blackface and the use of bananas as props to marginalize Africans.

Further, Russia has stood out as the country with perhaps the worst instances of hooliganism at soccer matches, a distinction that no doubt also led to the new FIFA policy.